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ZIMBABWE > AFRICA > INDEX

Provinces in Zimbabwe: Bulawayo, Harare, Manicaland, Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland East, Mashonaland West, Masvingo [ Victoria ], Matabeleland North, Matabeleland South, Midlands.

Bulawayo [ second city ], Great Zimbabwe Ruins [ African city-state that thrived in the Middle Ages ], Harare [capital - colonial name Salisbury ], Khami Ruins, Lake Kariba, Mana Pools National Park, Matobo National Park, Victoria Falls,

Zimbabwe borders BotswanaMozambique, South-Africa and Zambia.

This beautiful country is host to a range of wildlife which make for spectacular game viewing. Giraffe, zebra, elephants and rhinos are just some of the animals you have every chance of seeing in Hwange National Park

Capital City of Zimbabwe: Harare


car hire, hotels, travel agencies, travel guides, transportation / traveling to zimbabwe

links


Boating / Houseboat

 Travel Zimbabwe

Car Rental Zimbabwe

 Europcar - Locations : Bulawayo, Harare, Victoria falls
Only new rental cars [ average age only 6 months ], All inclusive prices, 24 hours roadside assistance, 24/7 service most airports.

 Avis
World's second largest general-use car rental business, providing business and leisure customers with a wide range of services.
 Hertz

Hotels in Zimbabwe

Hotels in  Africapoint.com - Hotels in Zimbabwe 
Discount Online Hotel Information and Reservation for Hotels in Zimbabwe. Good Range of Selected Hotels in Harare and Hwange for Leisure and Business Travel in Zimbabwe. Enjoy your stay in Zimbabwe at it's finest hotels.
Hotels in  Southtravels.com - Zimbabwe 

Hostels

 Hostelbookers.com - Great Hostels, Free booking, Fast & Easy to use
Hostelbookers.com is one of the worlds largest online booking services for hostels. All hostels you see here are offering realtime prices and availability.

National Parks

 Gonarezhou National Park
Zimbabwe's second largest game reserve is situated in the south-eastern corner of the country. It is part of the new Gaza-Kruger-Gonarezhou (GKG) Transfrontier Park - a wildlife reserve spanning three countries in Southern Africa: South Africa, Zimbabwe and Mozambique.
It features a visually stunning landscape of Africa's "upside down tree" the baobabs, as well as scrublands and sandstone cliffs. Three rivers - the Mwenezi, Save and Runde rivers - wind through the park, creating a haven for the rare suni antelope and striped king cheetah [ In Shona gona-re-zhou means "abode of elephants" ].
 Hwange National Park
Hwange National Park is a huge conservation area in south-western Zimbabwe. It is situated on the edge of the Kalahari desert, a region with little water and very sparse, semi-arid vegetation - making it excellent for game viewing, even though only about a quarter of this huge wildlife haven is accessable to tourists.
Mana Pools National Park, Sapi and Chewore Safari Area [ World Heritage List ]
On the banks of the Zambezi, great cliffs overhang the river and the floodplains. The area is home to a remarkable concentration of wild animals, including elephants, buffalo, leopards and cheetahs. An important concentration of Nile crocodiles is also be found in the area.
 Matobo National Park - Bulawayo-Region
The visually spectacular landscape of granite outcrops at Matobo Hills were called "the bald heads" or Sindebele by well-known warrior chief Mzilikazi. It is a region of remarkable natural beauty as well as historical and cultural significance.
Many tribes denote the Matobo hills with spiritual power: located in one of the cliffs is the Ndebele rain shrine of Mwari and some of the peaks like Shumba, Shabe and Shumba Sham are considered sacred and to merely point at them is believed to be unlucky…
San (Bushmen) lived in the hills about 2 000 years ago, leaving a rich heritage in hundreds of rock paintings. In the many crevices and caves, clay ovens and other historic artefacts have been found.

Travel Agents / Tour Operators / Zimbabwe Specialists



   Inbound

 Albatros Travel & Safaris [ Harare ]
Albatros Travel is a member of various nature conservation groups like WWF and is an accepted pioneer of ecological tourism. Albatros Travel works closely with local groups to conserve local nature and culture and indeed has been awarded many prizes in recognition of its activities in conservation as well as ecological, responsible and alternative tourism.

Travel Guides Zimbabwe / Related Books

 Zimbabwe - Lonely Planet 
Deanna Swaney, Myra Shackley, Tione Chinula (Editor), Vincent Talbot (Editor)
An in-depth look at Zimbabwe, this guide provides information on wildlife, safaris, music and activities, such as bungee jumping, river boarding, kayaking and white water rafting. There is also a helpful language section and an explanation of Zimbabwean English.
Paperback 376 pages (January 1, 2002); Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications; Language: English; ISBN: 1740590430
 Zimbabwe - The Rough Guide - Tony Pinchuck, Barbara McCrea
Includes accounts of all the major attractions from the lush Eastern Highlands to the magnificent ruins of Great Zimbabwe. Includes recommendations of the best palces to eat, drink and stay from campsites and backpackers' hostels to luxury safari lodges.
Paperback 432 pages (May 25, 2000); Publisher: Rough Guides; Language: English; ISBN: 1858285321
 The Dust Diaries - Owen Sheers
A few years ago, Owen Sheers stumbled upon a dusty book in his father's study by the extraordinary Arthur Cripps, part-time lyric poet and full-time unorthodox missionary who served in Rhodesia for fifty years from 1902. Sheers' discovery prompts a quest into colonial Africa at the turn of the century, by way of war, a doomed love affair and friction with the ruling authorities. His personal journey into the contemporary heart of darkness that is Mugabe's Zimbabwe finds more than Cripps' legacy - Sheers finds a land characterised by terror and fear, and blighted by the land reform policies that Cripps himself anticipated.
Paperback 320 pages (March 3, 2005); Publisher: Faber and Faber; Language: English; ISBN: 0571210260
 Where We Have Hope: A Memoir of Zimbabwe - Andrew Meldrum
In May 2003 Guardian journalist Andrew Meldrum was seized by Mugabe's thugs and deported, forced to leave for writing 'bad things' about Mugabe's regime. This was the shocking end of a grim journey. For twenty years, Meldrum had lived through Zimbabwe's transformation - from the African beacon of hope to violent despotism. This is his story. It is also a testament to the the power of hope. Throughout Zimbabwe, doctors, teachers, journalists and lawyers have refused to accept Mugabe's rule. Meldrum depicts their courage and heroism in moments of intense drama and tension. Where We Have Hope is a moving account of a life lived in a world of extremes - of ugly tyranny and of the extraordinary friendships and passionate beliefs that it inspires.
Hardcover 288 pages (June 21, 2004); Publisher: John Murray; Language: English; ISBN: 0719566509.

Lonely Planet Southern Africa
by Alan Murphy (Author), Kate Armstrong (Author), Matthew Firestone (Author), Mary Fitzpatrick (Author) 
Paperback: 812 pages; Publisher: Lonely Planet Publications; 4th edition (March 2007); Language: English; ISBN-10: 1740597451; ISBN-13: 978-1740597456

Transport / How do I travel to Zimbabwe

 Harare Airport [ HRE ]
 Bulawayo Airport

 Airline Tickets / Bargain Flights - price comparison possible

 Air Zimbabwe - Flight tickets Zimbabwe

 National Railways of Zimbabwe -  Harare Tel: 04.786033/ 786034/6
 Shongololo Express - railway adventure across South Africa
The Shongololo Express safari trains are very unique in that they only travel at night, thereby arriving each morning in a new and exciting destination and they also carry their own fleet of mini coaches for sightseeing tours during the day. No more packing and unpacking for with Shongololo your hotel travels with you.

 Getaway Africa - route planner Africa
 Online map of Zimbabwe [ Uni Texas - Perry-Castañeda Library - Map Collection ]


Links
 

 Travel Insurance - online travel and holiday insurance for UK and Irish residents

 Zimbabwe Tourist Authority

 Zimbabwe Governement

 Harare -  Capital City Zimbabwe - Colonial name: Salisbury
The name of the city was changed to Harare on April 18th, 1982, the second anniversary of Zimbabwean independence, taking its name from the Shona chieftain Neharawa. Suburbs of the city have, however, retained their European names, such as Borrowdale, Mount Pleasant, Tynwald, Rotten Row and Rietfontein.
Harare is famous for its beautiful jacaranda-lined streets, especially in the low density "Avenues" suburbs to the immediate north of the city centre

 Manicaland
 Mashonaland Central
 Mashonaland East
 Mashonaland West
 Masvingo (Victoria)
 Matabeleland North
 Matabeleland South
 Midlands

 Beitbridge [ Grenze Südafrika ]
 Binga
 Bulawayo Stadt
 Bulawayo / Matopas
 Chinhoyi
 Chitungwiza
 Gweru
 Hwange
 Kadoma
 Kariba [ Karibasee, Sambesifluss, Grenze Sambia ]
 Masvingo
 Mutarutare / Nyanga [ Grenze Mosambique ]

 Eastern Highlands
 Karibasee
 Matopo-Gebirge
 Victoria Falls / Hwange

 Great Zimbabwe/ Gonareazhou
 Kariba / Zambezi Valley
 Khami Ruins
 Limpopo
 Lowveld

 Harare/Highveld
 Midlands
 Kariba / Zambezi Valley
 Bulawayo / Matopas
 Victoria Falls/ Hwange
 Great Zimbabwe/ Gonareazhou
 Lowveld
 Mutare / Nyanga
 Eastern Highlands

 UCAZ - Urban Councils Association of Zimbabwe
A.o. the cities of Bindura, Bulawayo City, Chegutu, Chinhoyi, Chitungwiza, Gwanda, Epworth, Gweru City, Harare City, Hwange, Kadoma City, Kariba, Karoi Town, Kwekwe City, Marondera, Masvingo, Mutare City, Norton Town, Redcliff, Rusape Town, Ruwa, Shurugwi Town, Victoria Falls en Zvishavane Town
 University Harare
 Weather in Zimbabwe: dry season May - October
 Nwespaper - Zimbabwe Herald - controlled by the government
 Zimbabwe Independent - online newspaper

Cuisine - Zimbabwe Cooking Recipes

 Recipes from Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe has an interesting history. Its name means "house of stone," referring to the ancient city of Zimbabwe from which the Shona people ruled and conducted a gold trade between the 8th and the 15th centuries. Its more recent history echoes that of most of Africa dealing with a colonial past. The presence of Europeans and their descendants have influenced the cuisine of the country, but the majority of the people eat the food familiar in much of sub-Saharan Africa: corn, cassava, millet, pumpkin, peanuts and yams.

The Best of African Cooking 
By Manjase Banda (Author), Esanjam (Producer)
Paperback: 144 pages; Publisher: Esanjam; 2 Revised edition (March 14, 2007); Language: English; ISBN-10: 0954682130; ISBN-13: 978-0954682132

History of Zimbabwe

Independence: 18 April 1980 (from UK)

Iron Age Bantu-speaking peoples began migrating into the area about 2,000 years ago, including the ancestors of the Shona, who account for roughly four fifths of the country's population today. Ruins at Great Zimbabwe, a Shona-speaking state, attest the existence of a medieval Bantu civilization in the region. Linked to the establishment of trade ties with Muslim merchants on the Indian Ocean coast around the early 10th century, Great Zimbabwe began to develop in the 11th century. The state traded gold, ivory, and copper for cloth and glass. It ceased to be the leading Shona state in the mid-15th century.

 Zimbabwe's History - Wikipedia
Ancient civilizations, Arrival of the Portuguese, Ndebele invasion, British Conquest, Self-government, Unilateral independence, Guerrilla warfare, Majority rule, Constitution and parliamentary system, After independence
 Rhodes and Rhodesia: The White Conquest of Zimbabwe, 1884-1902 
Arthur Keppel-Jones
Hardcover 674 pages (June 11, 1996); Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press; Language: English; ISBN: 0773505342
 Great Zimbabwe Ruins [African city-state that thrived in the Middle Ages]
 Cecil Rhodes

 Zimbabwe Government - national archives

Music, Art & Culture, Events & Entertainment

Zimbabwes cultural identity: still influenced by Great-Britain [ language, education, traditions ].

Today the Bildhauerkunst [ Shona sculptures ] has developed itself as a symbol for art from Zimbabwe.

 The Zimbabwe Culture: Origins, Growth, and Decline of Precolonial States in Southern Zambezia 
Joseph O. Vogel (Foreword), Innocent Pikirayi
Tracing the rise and fall of indigenous states of southern Zambezia, "The Zimbabwe Culture" analyzes the long contentious history of the remains of the remarkable cyclopean masonry, ranging from mighty capitals of traditional kings to humble farmsteads. Forming a cornerstone of the geographical lore of Africa in the 17th and 18th centuries, debate on the origins, development and collapse of the Zimbabwe culture has never ceased and, with increasing archaeological research over the 20th century, has become more complex. Innocent Pikirayi examines the growth and decline of pre-colonial states on the entire Zimbabwean Plateau and southern Zambezia.
Hardcover 290 pages (March 30, 2001); Publisher: AltaMira; Language: English; ISBN: 075910090X
 Africultures.com - cultures africaines
Arts, Cinéma, Danse, Histoire / société, Internet, Littérature, Medias, Musique, Photo, Théâtre

Webportal / Search Engine / Zimbabwe Directory

 Travel Zimbabwe
Information/Advisory Accommodation Map, Travel / Tour / Fishing & Safari Operators, Overland / 4x4 / Self Drive, Houseboats - Kariba
Transport, Hunting Safaris/Operators, Leisure/Sport/Adventure, Tourist Attractions, Health & Medical, Maps, Zimbabwean and more Arts/Crafts.

 Yahoo - Zimbabwe Directories


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